1020 bcの例文
- The Middle Assyrian Empire ( 1365 1020 BC ) saw Assyria rise to be the most powerful nation in the known world.
- The city and its surrounds were absorbed into Assyria proper during the Middle Assyrian Empire ( 1365-1020 BC ), and then again during the Neo Assyrian Empire ( 911-605 BC ).
- In the second half of the 2nd millennium BCE, the Euphrates basin was divided between Hittite Empire in the north, with the Middle Assyrian Empire ( 1365 1020 BC ) eventually eclipsing the Hittites, Mitanni and Kassite Babylonians.
- This period of migration coincided with a power vacuum in the Near East with the Middle Assyrian Empire ( 1365 1020 BC ), which had dominated northwestern Iran and eastern Anatolia and the Caucasus, going into a comparative decline.
- The empire shrank significantly, and by 1020 BC Assyria appears to have controlled only areas close to Assyria itself, essential to keeping trade routes open in eastern Aramea, south eastern Asia Minor central Mesopotamia and north western Iran.
- The empire shrank significantly, and by 1020 BC Assyria appears to have controlled only areas close to Assyria itself, essential to keeping trade routes open in eastern Aramea, south eastern Asia Minor, central Mesopotamia and north western Iran.
- During the Middle Assyrian Empire ( 1365 1020 BC ), peoples such as the Hittites, Babylonians, Mitannians / Hurrians, Elamites, Phrygians, Kassites, Arameans, Gutians and Canaanites had formed various coalitions at different times in vain attempts to break Assyrian power.
- During the Middle Assyrian Empire ( 1366-1020 BC ) and in particular the Neo-Assyrian Empire ( 911-605 BC ) much of the Near East, Asia Minor, Caucasus, Eastern Mediterranean, Egypt, Ancient Iran and North Africa fell under Assyrian domination.
- The Middle Assyrian Empire ( 1365 1020 BC ) saw Assyria emerge as the most powerful military and political force in the known world, destroying the Mitanni-Hurrian empire, largely annexing the Hittite Empire, forcing the Egyptian Empire from the region, conquering Babylonia and besting the Elamites, Kassites and Phrygians among others.
- Beginning from the Middle Assyrian Empire ( 1365-1020 BC ), and also in the Neo Assyrian Empire ( 935-605 BC ) and the succeeding Neo-Babylonian Empire ( 605-539 BC ) and Achaemenid Empire, ( 539-323 BC ) Syria was known as Aramea and later Eber Nari.
- The Assyrian presence in Iran goes back 4000 years to ancient times, and Assyria was involved in the history of Ancient Iran even before the arrival of the modern Iranian peoples to the region circa 1000 BC . During the Old Assyrian Empire ( c . 2025-1750 BC ) and Middle Assyrian Empire ( 1365-1020 BC ) the Assyrians ruled over parts of " Pre-Iranic " northern and western Iran.
- The Assyrians were an integral part of the Akkadian Empire ( 2335-2154 BC ) which united the Akkadian-speaking peoples under one rule, and after its dissolution Assyria rose to prominence with the Old Assyrian Empire ( c . 2025-1750 BC ), Middle Assyrian Empire ( 1365-1020 BC ) and Neo-Assyrian Empire ( 911-605 BC ), the latter two of these empires made Assyria the most powerful nation in the world at the time.
- Radiocarbon dating of samples from the site as well as at late Yinxu and early Zhou capitals, using the wiggle matching technique, yielded a date for the conquest between 1050 and 1020 BC . The only date within that range matching all the astronomical data is 20 January 1046 BC . This date had previously been proposed by David Pankenier, who had matched the above passages from the classics with the same astronomical events, but here it resulted from a thorough consideration of a broader range of evidence.
- They passed through the control of several distant empires, including the Akkadian Empire ( 2335 2193 BC ), Ancient Egypt ( 1500 1300 BC ), the Hittite Empire ( 1400 1300 BC ), the Middle Assyrian Empire ( 1365 1020 BC ), the Neo-Assyrian Empire ( 911 605 BC ), the Neo-Babylonian Empire ( 604 539 BC ), the Achaemenid Empire ( 539 332 BC ) and the Hellenistic Roman rule in the Levant around 63 BC, the people of Ammon, Edom and Moab had lost their distinct identities, and were assimilated into Roman culture.